Digital Preservation Policy Framework

Version 3.1 - date last updated: 2 March 2016

​Purpose

The DPM workshop team developed this model document to help organizations develop a high-level policy document that explicitly states the scope, purpose, objectives, operating principles, and context of the organization's digital curation and preservation program. Every TDR needs to have a high-level policy. This model document identifies the recommended sections of a digital preservation policy framework with descriptions and examples for each section to guide the policy development process.

Scope

The outline for the framework is third version of a model document that was developed by the Digital Preservation Management workshop team to assist organizations in developing the high-level policy document that is necessary to meet the requirements of being recognized as a TDR. A model documents identifies and describes the sections of the document to be developed and provides examples of what to include in the section, adopting conventions used in the development of the Trustworthy Repositories Audit and Certification (TRAC) document released in 2007. This third version of the model document for the digital curation and preservation framework adds curation and updates the section descriptions and examples.

Implementation

Benefits of developing a digital preservation policy framework:

Forming and building a digital preservation team

Raising awareness about your program and its objectives

Managing expectations of team members and stakeholders

Defining a path for future developments

Demonstrating alignment with good practice

​Suggestions for developing your policy framework:

convene a team with essential members - distinguish between who has to participate and who has to be inform

as the lead, share iterative drafts for review by team members - avoid word smithing as a team activity

define a timeline with phases and share updates to raise awareness and manage expectations

distinguish between planning (things you intend to do in the future) and policy (things you are doing now)

Provenance

This model document reflects the findings of the Digital Preservation Management workshop curriculum development project (co-developers, Anne R. Kenney and Nancy Y. McGovern, with funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities); lessons learned in the development of similar frameworks for the Cornell University Library and the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) , as well as samples of frameworks developed by organizations that participated in the DPM workshop, e.g., the Library and Archives of Canada, N.C. State Library.